CAIT Demands Strong National E-Commerce Policy to Protect Small Traders

CAIT has urged the government to implement a robust National E-Commerce Policy to protect crores of small traders and neighborhood shops. The appeal comes amid projections that India's e-commerce market will reach $250 billion by 2030. CAIT Secretary General Praveen Khandelwal highlighted the need for strict enforcement of FDI rules and a ban on predatory pricing. CAIT National President BC Bhartia alleged that major e-commerce companies are violating FDI policy through manipulative business structures.

Key Points: CAIT Urges National E-Commerce Policy for Small Traders

  • India's e-commerce market projected to reach $250 billion by 2030
  • CAIT warns unregulated digital market could damage traditional retail
  • Urges strict enforcement of FDI rules and ban on predatory pricing
  • Report says 22 crore new Gen Z shoppers will join online commerce by 2030
3 min read

CAIT urges govt for robust national e-commerce policy to safeguard crores of small traders

CAIT urges the government for a robust National E-Commerce Policy to safeguard crores of small traders from unfair competition and predatory practices in India's growing digital market.

"These methods are not only anti-competitive but are gradually eliminating millions of honest traders who have built India's domestic market through trust and service. - BC Bhartia"

New Delhi, April 26

India's fast-growing digital market, if left unregulated, can seriously damage the country's traditional retail structure, which remains one of the largest generators of self-employment and jobs, the Confederation of All India Traders said on Sunday, urging the government to roll out an enforceable National E-Commerce Policy to protect crores of small traders, neighbourhood shops, and the livelihoods of crores of employees.

In a letter sent to Union Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal, CAIT Secretary General and MP Praveen Khandelwal, referring to the latest joint report of Deloitte and Google titled "The $250 Billion Commerce Frontier," said the report clearly reflects the massive future expansion of India's digital commerce market, but also underlines the urgent need for policy safeguards to ensure fair competition and balanced growth.

According to the report, India's e-commerce market has expanded to nearly $90 billion between 2019 and 2025 and is projected to touch $250 billion by 2030.

It further states that by 2030, 22 crore new Gen Z shoppers will join online commerce, Gen Z consumers will account for 45 per cent of total online spending, 15 crore new shoppers will come online, and per capita e-commerce spending is expected to double.

Tier-2 cities and smaller towns already account for over 60 per cent of online shoppers, nearly half of total spending, and close to three-fifths of total orders.

Khandelwal said these numbers show the tremendous scale and opportunity in India's digital market.

CAIT urged that the government urgently implement a comprehensive National E-Commerce Policy with provisions for strict enforcement of FDI rules, ban on predatory pricing, regulation of dark stores, transparency in algorithms and seller rankings, protection against dark patterns, accountability for counterfeit and sub-standard goods, equal opportunities for MSMEs and small retailers, data protection, and a dedicated grievance redressal system for traders and consumers.

India's small retailers, kirana stores, wholesalers, distributors, transporters, and allied sectors support crores of families across urban and rural India. Any weakening of this ecosystem would have serious economic and social consequences, he noted.

CAIT National President, BC Bhartia, alleged that major e-commerce companies are continuously violating the spirit of India's FDI policy through indirect inventory ownership, preferred seller arrangements, private labels, and manipulative business structures.

What was permitted as a marketplace model has increasingly become an inventory-controlled model.

He further stated that practices such as predatory pricing, deep discounting through cash burning, dark stores, dark patterns, preferential listings, and supply of sub-standard goods have become common. These methods are not only anti-competitive but are gradually eliminating millions of honest traders who have built India's domestic market through trust and service.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Sneha F
The report says Gen Z will account for 45% of online spending by 2030 - that's concerning for small traders. But I also think traditional shops need to adapt with technology. My father's shop in Delhi started accepting UPI and delivering via WhatsApp during lockdown, and it saved his business. It's about finding balance!
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James A
I moved from Bangalore to New York and see similar issues here. But India's case is unique - you have millions of family-run shops that are the backbone of local communities. CAIT is right to push for transparency in algorithms and dark patterns. Algorithms shouldn't manipulate what people see without consent.
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Varun X
But let's be honest - Indian consumers love discounts and convenience. The government also needs to make GST easier for small traders and provide them digital training. You can't just ban deep discounting without supporting traditional players to modernise. The policy must have a carrot along with the stick!
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Michael C
The FDI violation allegations are serious. If these companies are operating inventory models through dark stores while claiming to be marketplaces, that's fraud. India's regulatory system needs teeth, not just more committees. Look at how the EU regulates big tech - we need something similar.
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Priyanka N
As someone who shops from both D-Mart and Amazon, I feel the pain of small traders but also appreciate the choices e-commerce gives us in tier-2 towns. The government needs to create a level playing field - maybe allow partnering between kirana stores and e-commerce platforms for last-mile delivery? That could save jobs while embracing progress!

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